ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON

Scottish

"Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but of playing a poor hand well. "

Above all,
Robert Louis Stevenson was an artful storyteller and while the subject of his
tales ranged from the strange and ghostly to rumbustious adventures – from The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
to Kidnapped – his main raison d’etre was to thrill and
entertain. And, at this, he was very successful.

Stevenson was
born in Edinburgh in 1850 and as a child was lonely and chronically ill,
suffering from a weak chest, which would trouble him throughout his life. He
was expected to follow his father’s profession in engineering and with this in
view he entered Edinburgh University in 1867 but three years later he switched
to law. However his real interest was in writing and by 1875 he had established
himself locally as an author. The same year he was called to the bar and
embarked on a love affair which eventually led to marriage in 1880 with an
American divorcee, Fanny Osbourne.

In 1878 he
developed an insatiable appetite for journeying abroad, the outcome of which
was his early travel books including Travels
With a Donkey In the Cevannes. In 1879 he left for America, spending some
time on the West Coast, living for a while in San Francisco. where for
several months he struggled ‘all alone on forty-five cents a day, and sometimes
less, with quantities of hard work and many heavy thoughts,’in an
effort to support himself through his writing. But by the end of the winter,
his health was broken again and he found himself at death’s door. When his
father heard of his condition, he cabled him money to help him through this
period.

For the next seven years, between 1880 and 1887,
Stevenson searched in vain for a place of residence suitable to his state of
health. He spent his summers at various places in Scotland and England, including Westbourne, Dorset, a
residential area in Bournemouth. It was during his time here that he wrote the story Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr
Hyde. To avoid the harsh
British winters Stevenson travelled to France where for a time he enjoyed
almost complete happiness. ‘I have so many things to make life sweet for me,’
he wrote, ‘it seems a pity I cannot have that other one thing - health.’ However, in spite of his ill health, he
produced the bulk of his best-known work during these years: Treasure Island, his first widely popular book; Kidnapped; The Black Arrow; and two volumes of poetry, A Child's Garden of Verses and Underwoods.

In 1888, he and Fanny left for the South Seas in their
yacht Casco and for nearly three years he wandered the eastern and central
Pacific, stopping for extended stays at the Hawaiian Islands, Tahiti, New Zealand, and
the Samoan Islands. During
this period, he completed his finest novel of Scottish revolutionary history, The
Master of Ballantrae, as well as composing two ballads
based on the legends of the islanders, and wrote the wonderful supernatural
tale The Bottle Imp.

In 1890, Stevenson purchased a tract of about 400 acres
in Upolu, an island in Samoa. Here, he
established himself in the village of Vailima. He took
the native name Tusitala, Samoan for ‘Teller
of Tales’. On 3 December 1894, Stevenson was talking to his wife and straining
to open a bottle of wine when he collapsed. He died within a few hours, of a
suspected cerebral
haemorrhage. He was only forty-four years old. It is remarkable that
a man so troubled with crippling ill health could produce such rich treasury of
prose. His later works included The Black
Arrow (1888), The Wrong Box
(1889), The Wrecker (1892) and The Weir of Heriston (1896).

The Writers’ Museum near
Edinburgh’s Royal Mile devotes a
room to Stevenson, containing some of his personal possessions from childhood
through to adulthood. Another memorial in Edinburgh stands in West Princes
Street Gardens below Edinburgh Castle; it is a
simple upright stone inscribed with ‘RLS – A Man of Letters 1850–1894’. In
2013, a statue of Stevenson as a child with his dog was unveiled by the author Ian Rankin outside Colinton
Parish Church. However, it is true to say that the real monuments to
Stevenson’s life and works are his books.